Different strokes: Linda Nochlin on "Turner, Whistler, Monet".WITH ITS AMBITIOUS "TURNER, WHISTLER See Windows XP., Monet: Impressionist Visions" opening next month, the Art Gallery of Ontario, Toronto, in conjunction with the Reunion des Musees Nationaux and Tate Britain, joins recent curatorial attempts to reshuffle the deck of nineteenth-century art. Rather than conform to the monographic blockbuster or utilize neat categories like Romanticism, realism, Impressionism impressionism, in musicimpressionism, in music, a French movement in the late 19th and early 20th cent. It was begun by Debussy in reaction to the dramatic and dynamic emotionalism of romantic music, especially that of Wagner. Reflecting the impressionist schools of French painting and letters, Debussy developed a style in which atmosphere and mood take the place of strong emotion or of the story in program music., or symbolism to provide shape and substance, these exhibitions seek out new relationships among works and artists that bridge temporal or national boundaries. Such was the case, for example, with "Crossing the Channel: British and French Painting in the Age of Romanticism," a traveling show (it ended last fall at the Metropolitan Museum of Art) that successfully charted exchanges between French and English art from 1820 to 1840. Lead curator Patrick Noon argued for a greatly expanded conception of Romanticism and demonstrated the links, both formal and iconographic, uniting Britain and France during the headiest years of the movement.[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] The Toronto show comprises one hundred paintings, watercolors, pastels, and prints by Turner, Whistler, and Monet and claims to "provide the first opportunity to explore the extraordinary artistic dialogue that takes place between their works." This reciprocation reciprocation /re·cip·ro·ca·tion/ (re-sip?ro-ka´shun) 1. the act of giving and receiving in exchange; the complementary interaction of two distinct entities. 2. an alternating back-and-forth movement. is embedded in both themes and visual styles, and, once more, the fruitful exchange of ideas between Britain and France in the construction of artistic movements--here, Impressionism and symbolism--is insisted on. Yet as so often happens with exhibitions purporting to show new "influences" and "interactions," difference, rather than similarity, is foregrounded once the works are considered all together. Take, for instance, the pairing of Monet and Turner: Even though Monet admired the older artist, it is Harold Bloom's ever-handy "misprision" that dominates in a comparison of Turner's Dogano, San Giorgio, 1842, and Monet's Thames Below Westminster, ca. 1871. The British artist, despite his daring use of evanescent ev·a·nes·cent ( v![]() -n s glazes and misty dissolves, clearly belongs to the traditional past. Rain, Steam, and Speed, 1844, evinces the same technique: Turner effectively captures the approach of a railroad train with the same perspective devices as those used by Claude Lorrain Claude Lorrain (klōd lôrăN`), whose original name was Claude Gelée or Gellée (zhəlā`) in the seventeenth century. Although Turner has rendered a phantasmagoric impression of the modern age, he has conceived its illusion of depth by way of the conventional diminishing warmth of color and solidity. None of this traditional illusionism illusionism, in art, a kind of visual trickery in which painted forms seem to be real. It is sometimes called trompe l'oeil [Fr.,=fool the eye]. The development of one-point perspective in the Renaissance advanced illusionist technique immeasurably. It was highly developed in the baroque period; Caravaggio's bowls of fruit included insects to enhance verisimilitude. American masters of trompe l'oeil include William M. Harnett and John F. Peto. for Monet! While the French artist's simplified strokes of relatively colorless paint insist on the concrete facts of immediate vision, they also reiterate the materiality of the canvas's surface rather than dissolve it into a transparent pane of glass. As for the cosmopolitan Whistler, his Nocturne nocturne (nŏk`tûrn) [Fr.,=night piece], in music, romantic instrumental piece, free in form and usually reflective or languid in character. John Field wrote the first nocturnes, influencing Chopin in the writing of his 19 nocturnes for piano. in Blue and Gold: Old Battersea Bridge, ca. 1872-75, forewarns, by its very title, that vulgar illusionism is out of the picture. Instead, he constructs a near-abstract yet still recognizable "musical" version of his subject; the dark silhouette of the bridge rises austerely above a vista of fading blues, dying pinks, and dissolving violets. In an 1877 review, Henry James said of the artist's canvases, "It may be a narrow point of view, but to be interesting it seems to me that a picture should have some relation to life as well as to painting. Mr. Whistler's experiments have no relation whatever to life; they have only a relation to painting. "It seems unlikely that James would have said this about a Turner. "Turner, Whistler, Monet: Impressionist Visions" will be on view at the Art Gallery of Ontario, Toronto, June 12-Sept. 12; Musee d'Orsay, Paris, Oct. 15-Jan. 17, 2005; Tate Britain, London, Feb. 12, 2005-May 15, 2005. Linda Nochlin is Lila Acheson Wallace Professor of Modern Art at New York University's Institute of Fine Arts. |
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